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Its value depends on how safe the games netcode is. I used to play an FPS game where the hits were client authoritative and hackers edited enemy positions and made them stand in a row in front of the hacker. Hacker could easily wipe the enemy team with that.


I agree but it's an interesting problem, things like parking spaces and roads will still have to be made to the size of largest vehicle that will use them and I imagine more cars in the same amount of road will lead to even more traffic.


No. There are buses, trucks and vans on the road but not everything is made based on them. In many parking spots you can't park full size vans - and vans are quite popular.

In Europe, if you're driving a huge North American truck (which some people do) your parking options are very very limited. We don't build everything for their sizes only because there's some of them on the road.


This is Paris we're talking about. The roads will remain the size that Hausmann built them. https://www.theguardian.com/cities/2016/mar/31/story-cities-...


You can have different sizes of parking spaces, for different prices maybe.

And the change will probably not increase the amount of cars on the road, because at the same time, bikes and public transport are becoming more attractive in cities all across the continent.


You could just get a custom keyboard that is comfortable for you. Key mapping is generally an independent step. Most of these keyboards are completely programmable with custom keymaps and layers. Many come with blank keycap options, you can also rearrange a regular keycap set.


You can't do what OP is looking for without a custom PCB. The switches and caps and mappings might be customizable but their physical position and size on the board isn't.

Despite pushing the envelope in many ways, custom keyboards can also be strangely traditionalist at the same time. Making a PCB is a risky venture and most manufacturers don't want to risk it.

A huge amount of models still use a huge 7u or larger space bar for example when something as small as 4u would suffice, and leave room for much more ergonomic placement of modifiers. (or other improvements like extra keys, keyed gaps etc.)


Yes, most keyboards still have the traditional layout. But I believe many options fit what OP needs. A split keyboard such as Ergodox EZ allows access to the maximum amount of keys possible without moving your hand. You can then customize the mapping to properly distribute commonly used keys.


Ergodox EZ is ortholinear. Ortholinears by their nature tend to not have spacing issues but they require (extensive) retraining.

There's a very good chance that the above poster was looking at staggered layouts if it's their first foray into custom keyboards, and not even considering orthos.


It's insane how this situation was allowed to exist for so long. Do other world powers not have the power to stop the genocide and concentration camps or do they just not care? It sickens me that millions of people are being tortured for their ethnicity and no state even properly acknowledges the situation.


What would be the greater loss of life and harm to innocents- allowing China to continue, or world war 3? Because war with China will definitely devolve into a global conflict.

We couldn't even get India or Brazil on board with sanctions against Russia for invading Ukraine, and nothing short of military invasion will stop the CCP from doing what it does. Devout religious faith is entirely antithetical to the CCP rule- both in the idea of a higher power from the state, but also China's history wrt. the boxer rebellion and other movements.


> ...nothing short of military invasion will stop the CCP from doing what it does.

Why do you think that's true?

The CCP, IMHO, is well aware that the real hard part is Western states even slightly slowing their roll on outsourcing every damn thing to China. Sanctions could absolutely work, but they're a double edged sword at this point.


China views what it is doing to Xinjiang as social policy- core to their identity.

Sanctions and trade pressure may swing the needle on some economic policy, but the "harmonious society" ethos is so deeply ingrained in how the CCP stays in power that I do not believe they are going to budge.


that is a false choice often used to justify the inaction


>> Because war with China will definitely devolve into a global conflict.

We're risking global conflict with Russia now to save Ukraine. People are willing to engage in global conflicts as long as the victims look like us.

But when they dont look at us, we dont care. People will say it outright

https://www.cnbc.com/2022/01/17/chamath-palihapitiya-says-no...

CNBC: Billionaire investor Chamath Palihapitiya says ‘nobody cares’ about Uyghur genocide in China PUBLISHED MON, JAN 17 20226:00 PM ESTUPDATED WED, JAN 19 202210:02 AM EST thumbnail Amanda Macias


Ukraine amounts to giving military aid to a sovereign country. Potentially controversial, but not exactly "instantly cause WW3" material.

Your proposal is, what exactly? Airdropping crates of machine guns over western China? I'm sure that'll go over great.


>Your proposal is, what exactly? Airdropping crates of machine guns over western China? I'm sure that'll go over great.

The CIA is already dropping weapons in Western China for the locals to carry out terrorist acts. Its the primary reason Uyghur extremists groups were being isolated from Chinese society.

Knowing the US population, they will stick to willful denial of this particular fact for about 2-3 decades while the ruling class continues starting fires around world that send these poor people right into a hellish reality.

Uyghurs, meet the Syrians, Iraqis, Yemenis, Afghans, Palestinians, Libyans...etc that had this western template run on them.


First, Russia is a pathetic country that has its hands full fighting one small country (not the first time either). China has the industrial strength of like 12 Russias, and unlike Russia, its army is more disciplined, and isn’t made up of a bunch of convicts and sick alcoholics. And we know Russia knows that we know how weak they are, so for all their bluster they wouldn’t dare attack NATO, nuclear or otherwise.

China is a whole different story than Russia. They matter.


Going by your link by 'look like us' you mean look Sri Lankan like Chamath Palihapitiya? Are you saying Ukrainians look Sri Lankan and that is why the USA is promoting the same policy of Russian(and prior to that Soviet) containment that has been our very public policy since the 1950s and that we allocated over a hundred billion dollars in military budget on every year since then?


>But when they dont look at us, we dont care

Complete load of trash. The situation in Ukraine is significantly less complex the situations (like Syria) and yet people still like to claim it's about race.

Ukraine as a country is fighting against an enemy with the end goal of joining the western sphere of influence. It's not a messy civil war. It's not repression inside another country's borders. It's not a migrant crisis caused by a failing economy.


No real power to. State sovereignty is the foundation of geopolitics and globalized enforcement of morality is maybe at its infancy, if it will even get anywhere.


Also, if you accept the maxim that government gets its power and legitimacy from the consent of the governed (whether voluntary or under threat of violence) it should quickly become apparent how difficult it is to force the matter.


and it will stop as soon as random countries start flying weaponized drones over America over causes that we would be completely blindsided by and would never reach consensus on changing


What a terrifying phrase, globalized enforcement of morality, it stirs images of the crusades and colonization of the americas in my mind.


It's just the typical liberal self perception of US and western foreign policy. But it's definitely a particularly extreme example, I don't know what you would even really respond to such a statement:

> "State sovereignty is the foundation of geopolitics and globalized enforcement of morality is maybe at its infancy"

I don't really even know where to begin, it could be satire?


Maybe it's a very sci-fi long term view where we have been living through the violent and misguided infancy of global enforcement of morality for centuries.


Unfortunately, no. There are evil things that happen all over the world, and the world powers are powerless to fix it. If <insert world power here> mobilizes its military to topple a government doing evil things--now what? People will be (rightfully) mad that the world power literally installed a new government, so the government will be unstable and illegitimate--and this will likely only cause even more strife.


You sound like someone who’s heard of Iraq!


The insane is that you are expecting the world powers to do something, when most people are not even doing the little things. One of them is boycotting Chinese-made products. This will inconvenience their life a little bit and make it more expensive (though maybe boost the local or friendly countries economies). Yet most people will not do that.


> boycotting Chinese-made products.

It's really challenging. Even if you try to just buy things made in the USA (or wherever, not China) very often some (or all) of the parts are made in China. And some sellers just lie about it: you order a product advertised as "Made in the USA" and when it arrives there's a "Made in China" label on it.


Geopolitics is a cruel master, I suppose.


>> It's insane how this situation was allowed to exist for so long. Do other world powers not have the power to stop the genocide and concentration camps or do they just not care?

In the US we say "Never Again" w/r/t genocide and concentration camps, but ultimately we turn a blind eye to (or worse, fund/arm perpetrators.) A great example would be turning a blind eye to the Bosnian genocide and arming Saudi Arabia with US weapons as they wipe out large parts of Yemen.

The reality is that we only intervene in narrow circumstances:

1. When there is money. The example would be Kuwait in 1991, when we went "to save the people" but in reality we went to try an capture Iraqi oil

2. When the people look like us. Both left and right leaning publications couldnt care less about reporting on genocide unless the victims look like us. Ukraine is an example, they look like us, and thus they have massive help.


Right, it's not like the USA has funded containment of Russia/Soviets to the tune of 100 billions dollars in explicit defense budget allocation every year since the 1950s. Nope, it's that they look like us.


And don’t Russians look like us, too?


> Do other world powers not have the power to stop the genocide and concentration camps or do they just not care?

China has nuclear weapons. Would you prefer a total nuclear exchange instead of the current (bad) status quo of Uyghur genocide? I’m assuming that a total nuclear exchange between the US and China would lead to more suffering than not invading China and letting them continue their current Uyghur policy.


Look at what the West is allowing Israel to do in Palestine

Now you have your answer

Remember when China introduced the 1 child policy? China allowed Uyghurs to have more to not impact their minority

Now you understand how geopolitics affect your view on countries, don't let the propaganda stop you from being a critical thinker

Think more and make your own research


If it would really come down to it, the West (i.e., basically the USA) would be able to stop Israel oppressing the Palestinians. So that is political. They can't do that in China (without triggering a nuclear war).

I don't know about the 1-child policy exception; apparently China's internal calculus was different then from now. It would be nice if you were more explicit about why you're mentioning this instead of conspiracy-theory-like urging readers to "do their own research".


That's right. The US is unable to stop the torture in China.

They don't want to stop the torture in Palestine. The people running our government have vested interests. Every politician ever must bow to AIPAC, and many politicians don't need to bow, as they have their own interest in Israel (they are Israeli citizens and can go there any time).


>Do other world powers not have the power to stop the genocide and concentration camps or do they just not care?

The realist answer: most leaders are eager to see the PRC securitization model work. Even if they don’t have the state capacity or ethnic mix to replicate. Most developing countries who still haven’t figured out their post colonial shitshow ethnic rivalries want what PRC is selling - turnkey safe/smart city solutions that can bring domestic serenity via technologic repression.

Majority of world powers simply did not eat the genocide/concentration camp propaganda. Plurality UN position still supports PRC actions in XJ as counterterrorism / deradicalization, which it is. From hundreds of terrorism attacks to 0. Obama got the Nobel Peace prize for worse. Second group = (mostly western led) block who characterize as crimes against humanity, which bluntly doesn't mean shit and isn't actionable. Finally the # of govs that formally characterize XJ as genocide has around flat earth level of support, augmented by flood of useful idiots who ate the propaganda who thinks not believing literal lying Pompeo initiated genocide propaganda narrative is insane.

Reality is PRC securitization of XJ, i.e. engineered mass cultural change (read: cultural genocide, which UN has no formal definition on) within one generation is something MANY still fractured countries are eager to see succeed because they are experiencing same issues with minority unrest on restive regions. Harsher reality is, forceful integration is essential 101 to building long term state capacity. Most countries would love to have US meltingpot or Canadian multiculturalism where state reap benefits from actual prior genocide by not harbouring potential existential internecine factionalism, while state does token effort to reconcile with apologia to minorities who can’t remember their culture let alone meaningfully coordinate.

PRC is delivering / showing model that does that in one generation. "So long" is less than decade from 2014 "strike hard" campaign that kick started securitization, PRC is zerg rushing western colonization in a fraction of time with fraction of suffering, and likely will integrate minorities long term. XJ mass internment phase has been over year+, small % of "problematic" individuals transferred to long term prison, this isn't a perennial US prison industrial complex that interns comparable % of minorities - 1/12 according to retarded Zenz estimates which is about lifetime chance for US blacks. Let that sink in. Most of XJ is just a heavy surveillance state now, and following trend in Tibet, most of Uyghurs will be relatively nationalized/secularized/adopt PRC islam in a couple generations. It's not nice, but it's nicer than actual genocide.


[flagged]


What a huge exaggeration. People were rightly angry after 9/11, but most Americans didn’t want to “kill all Muslims”. And having competition with china is not the same as hating them. China abused the US trade relation for a long time, but it’s hardly hate to play hardball back.


No, the average American didn't but the war on terror have caused over 900.000 direct deaths, millions indirect deaths and displaced 46 million people. Most were and are completely innocent Muslims. I too wonder why those lives were okay to end or destroy or if those caring about what happens in China did something to stop what they could actually do something about?

Call it whataboutism if you want but I fail to see how any American can claim a moral high ground and why they would want their government to do something about this above what they themselves are a part of.

Unless of course they didn't want the war on terror either but I very much doubt that the average American cares as much about the Muslims killed after 9/11 as they do about the Chinese Muslims. It smells of repeating propaganda to me. Sure this should be stopped, but it is not as high up the list as what the US does to anyone who actually care about the people and not just the politics - after all the amount hurt is extremely loopsidede.


I don’t totally disagree with your post but it is definitely fine to call out genocide even if your country doesn’t have the moral high ground. No one really has the high ground these days.


I find it even weirder that “iron brother” Pakistan seems fine with it.


Despite having a bomb or two, Pakistan certainly has nothing to gain by provoking China. They already have India on the opposite side of them just itching for a reason to destroy them.


It’s not weird. Tribal alliances are mostly based on economic needs or wants, especially at a nation state level.


I do actually believe there's a difference between failed and incompetent state-building, and the methodical and systematic genocide of a culture.

And I don't think I'm alone. Hitler's methodical and organized genocide gets more attention and disdain than Mao's Great Leap Forward, even though the latter killed more people.

Is that right? I dunno, but it's how people think. Accidents and mistakes are granted more leeway than pure malice.


What do you suggest? Go to war? More tariff? People only do things in their own interest as always. Besides PRC is not torturing Uyghurs for being Uyghurs, they are torturing them for not being compliant with PRC rule - in Xinjiang region, they happen to be Uyghurs.


as the native people they wanted Xinjiang independence for a long time. Which led to separatist violence and bombings by Uyghur groups. There are definitely reasons other than just racism, its just a big taboo in the west to mention that.


why should someone else do it? you could pick up a rifle and head over to go kill some chinese people to teach them a lesson.

btw, this is the guy who provided all of the evidence of concentration camps.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adrian_Zenz


I mean, not "all the evidence." For one thing, China doesn't deny that the camps exist--they just claim that they're for "reeducation" or "work training." For another, other people have reported on the issue, and shown that the camps are real.

Unfortunately, while I can present sources to rebut you, your claim isn't falsifiable, since you'll just assert that any source that I present is "US counter-intelligence / the thinktank blob," because it rebuts your claim.


yeah, sorry, the media and the blob feeds us bullshit 24/7, on pretty much every topic. i have no reason to believe they're being truthful on this one particular thing, especially about america's biggest geopolitical foe. i mean wow, how convenient. china is run by literal NAZIS? you don't say!

they bank on the fact that people have the memory span of a hamster and will forget the 75 years of complete horseshit that was fed to us before the current thing they're trying to sell.


> i have no reason to believe they're being truthful on this one particular thing

The problem is that your claim is unfalsifiable. Any evidence that I present, you'll claim is wrong, because it opposes your view. There are independent groups that went to China to investigate--you'll claim they're just CIA-funded. There are groups from inside China that have investigated this--you'll claim they're also CIA-funded. And the "evidence" that you present to back your claim is that they must be CIA-funded, see what it is they're supporting!

I'm not claiming that the media tells the truth. What I'm claiming is that your position is not based on evidence.


good thing is, youre in a public space and this conversation is viewable by everyone, not just the person you are responding to that you so graciously have written off entirely.

so go ahead, shut the book on this for all of us. show us the evidence on this shocking genocide that no actual muslim countries believe is happening, that has zero noticeable macroeconomic or demographic indicators, that unlike every other genocide in history has not led to any mass migration to neighboring countries, that the US state department does not officially recognize.

camps exist for reeducation and suppressing terrorism. they employ heavy-handed techniques that offend western sensibilities. this is not denied and is a response to violent separatist activity that the US helped illegally and maliciously bankroll. this is viewed as a necessary evil. none of this is "genocide." It is also far more effective and less destructive than the response the US had to Muslim extremism.


neither is yours. it's just something you read about, and choose to believe. at this point if you choose to believe the US mainstream media doesn't march in synchronicity to orders from on high, i don't know what to tell you.

this is just gell-mann amnesia projected into another dimension. it's not about the thing you know - it's about the thing you hate, the group you hate, the people you hate, or want to hate.

besides, you can just call me a ccp shill wumao tankie or whatever and pull a little unfalsifiability of your own. all the cool kids are doing it, you should do it too.


Wholesale refusal to parse the material at all is no better than willful blindness, if not worse.

At least with the latter you arent simultaneously ingesting and spewing forth propaganda from foreign power and nefarious interests....


Adrian Zenz is incredibly trustworthy and reliable as proven by all these other sources which I can't show you because, uhh, you wouldn't believe them. 30 minute old account nervously shuffles through pile of 15 printouts with Radio Free Asia letterhead while trying his hardest to maintain a smug expression


Unfortunately, my printer ran out of ink 14 printouts in. If only the Radio Free Asia logo didn't have so much green in it!


Even worse, attempts to even discuss the issue get aggressively hushed.


"Hushed" meaning only a couple of articles a month in major newspapers, or something else?

https://www.theguardian.com/world/uyghurs

https://www.bbc.com/news/topics/cpz1y9ney3mt

(Can't find a free American newspaper with tags/categories.)


I do not know of any war or conflict where one of the primary or secondary goals was to liberate anyone from concentration/death camps (possible exceptions for POW camps though).

There are no scenarios where anyone manages to talk China or North Korea out of these peacefully. And while there probably are many where we win in a shooting war against either or both of those, none of those scenarios conclude with the world economy intact. What consumer goods can you name that your country makes domestically? We don't even make clothing domestically anymore. I suppose most are self-sufficient food-wise, so there'd only be a slight uptick in famines...

Hell, there's an entire younger generation that can't even bring themselves to condemn Maoism. But you want to sacrifice tens or hundreds of thousands of lives driving tank columns into Beijing?


Agree completely, but wanted to point out, on the food part you mentioned, I think China is a big food (rice) importer, so “we” have that going for us. Not that the CCP would bat an eye if half its population starved to death, they’d gladly “sacrifice” that to avoid losing power.


>Hell, there's an entire younger generation that can't even bring themselves to condemn Maoism

That's an absurd take


You misspelled "ongoing observation".


Wasnt the modding scene a result of game dev from scratch being inaccessible? Downloading UE/Unity/Godot and making your dream game is probably easier nowadays than trying to make it as a HL mod then.


It had more of a cobbled together feel.

You could inject code in a lot of places and people were doing wonky things. I think it had to do with the user base being far smaller at the time. Knowledgeable people were still a significant part of it and security was far less of concern.

There was also far less money involved which is always a great filter for the kind of personality you want in this kind of community.


Yes and no.

Modding a game means that you have a specific starting point, the original game, which you are probably a fan of. And you may want your creation to be a part of this original world, share some (or most) of gameplay elements, design elements, story elements etc.

People modded Half-Life not only because modding Half-Life was somewhat easier than making an FPS game from scratch, but also because they wanted to explore the original story from another angle, or they liked how engine feels to play, or for whatever other reason wanted a starting point to be a complete game. Kind of the original asset store: the assets of the game you are modding.


To me it is about focus. If I am interested in game AI, I can mod a game and focus on just the AI. No need to build out the rest of the art assets and design.

If you are a big fan of open world games, GTA and Skyrim took teams of a 100 people, years of effort to make. Not something an indie is going to be able to reproduce. Modding allows you to create in that world.

Third would be reach. Getting people to try out a mod for a game is often much easier than getting them to try out a whole new game.


Tailwind CSS is very popular and uses this kind of classes. They might be using that CSS framework in the code base.


Did you check all of the samples provided? It can read an entire research paper and understand the figures just from the images of the papers pages. This seems to be a much deeper connection than extracting captions.


Are you sure? Sounds too epic


See the real examples for yourself, starting on page 34 ... mind-blowing.

https://cdn.openai.com/papers/gpt-4.pdf


The extreme ironing image example has a bullshit explanation in the paper. The extreme ironing on back of taxi is a popular photo with lots of text associated with that picture: https://google.com/search?q=extreme+ironing+taxi&tbm=isch

Give the model new images that are not in the training set (e.g. photos not on internet, or photos taken after model trained) and ask the same question and see how well it does!

The paper says: “Table 16. [snip] The prompt requires image understanding.”

I think the explanations (in the paper by OpenAI for the images) are probably misinformation or misdirection. I would guess it is recognising the images from it’s training and associating them with nearby text.


It seems like they used some unknown images in the livestream, see replies to: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35157940

However, I still think they should not have used images from the internet/training set in their paper. And to be safe, neither should they use “generated” images.

I am looking forward to taking photos of some paintings by friends and seeing if ChatGPT can describe them!


It's SOTA on DocVQA[1] so yeah it is able to read text/graphs/tables from images

[1] https://www.docvqa.org/


Surely the games used a high level API that Sony could support with this. I doubt games had any code related to external camera tracking, the system must've just spit out the position of the headset to the game.


After experiencing how good Oculus Link works over Wi-Fi LAN, I won't purchase any wired VR headset no matter the quality. Wi-Fi is fast enough to stream high quality video to any of these headsets but for some reason it is still not embraced in the circle.


Too much variability in the home networks that people have are likely one of the reasons


600W from a tiny connector is questionable but the issue isn't caused by the 12VHPWR connector. Fault happens on the part that converts 4x older PCIe into the new headers. So this is an adapter issue and not something related to the PCI SIG design. According to Igor's labs investigation what happens is one or two of the welds in the adapter crack and adapter turns into 2x PCIe to 12VHPRW which is not what it's specced out for.


The issue is the 12VHPWR connector, not just the adapter.

http://jongerow.com/12VHPWR/

Yes, if "the right materials" are used and the cables are treated "properly" (not bent out of spec, not too many connection cycles) then it's "OK", but those shouldn't be requirements designed into something that cost-conscious consumers are going to be assembling.


I think the 50A is a bigger issue than the 600W. Consider that the latest spec for usb-c allows up to 240W in a much smaller cable, but does so at 48V, meaning that the current is only 5A.


Note that it's in a much smaller cable. Galax tested a 12VHPWR connector at 1530W and the outer jacket stayed under 70C.

https://twitter.com/hms1193/status/1585257428291325958


To be clear - the typical temperature rating you’ll find on mains power cabling in a house is 60c. The highest you’ll typically be able to find is 75c.

70 Celsius is NUTS for that usage, not ‘oh, that’s ok then’


It's easier to spec out heat resistive materials for a 5cm cable than for the entirety of a house's mains power cabling. Sure, 70°C is a lot, but I think the point is that it would work if it had to.


It’s a sign of a lot of resistive heat losses and requires specialized insulation and connectors at that level (same for mains). Typically insulation is starting to weaken or even melt at that point.

It’s well outside normal expected operating temperatures for wire.


Crazy high resistive heating when driven at multiple factors above the rated power isn't cause for alarm though. If you put 50A through your wall outlet you wouldn't be surprised when it got hot. The only application where pulling 1500W through a 12VHPWR connector is even close to possible is when using cryogenic cooling (when the conductive cooling will keep the power cable below ambient despite how many amps are crammed through them).

This data point isn't exhaustive, but it does indicate that the actual safety margin is not as tight as is assumed from this news cycle.


You and I have a very different concept of safe? I don’t think it’s saying what you think it’s saying.

That brand new connectors and wire that are custom specced wouldn’t catch on fire (but come close!) at only 2x the power draw means it’s very likely any damage to a connector, wire, etc. especially with normal wire and connectors likely would cause damage and a fire, at much less than that power draw.

Which is what we’ve been getting reports on.

And that is just from minor physical damage it seems, ignoring corrosion or fraying wires over time which is usually the bigger problem.


That is not an issue with the connector though. That is the adapter. That is my entire point. The connector is safe. Shoddy adapters are the problem. Putting multiple supplies in parallel is always very shady, doubly when it's high current through a small piece of metal. That's what's dangerous, not the 12VHPWR connector.


That has yet to be shown in the field. We know of one incredibly dodgy adapter, but the issues I’m calling out take time to show up, and lead to issues as well.


Rather than wait for them it's better to do analysis and be predictive.

http://jongerow.com/12VHPWR/

The truth is the plug is more demanding and expensive than lower density options and it's dangerous when corners are cut. This is always true in power electronics, but the risk surface area is higher with a new and demanding connector.


I'm not quite sure what your point was in the first sentence - that is always better, yes. We don't have access to analysis done by the EEs in charge of making the plug decisions, but we're already seeing high profile failures, which is unusual.

Even with connectors and cables without those early problems, there are often longer term problems that show up over time - cables fraying at the connectors due to movement, plugs and connectors building up corrosion (and hence having higher resistance), connections loosening or getting bent, etc.

The link you posted, and your later statement seems to support the same view. I'm just repeating it so the folks dismissing this as just an issue with the badly designed adapters Nvidia distributed (in some cases?). It's overall a connector and spec that's on the edge of the performance envelope with some 'obvious' types of field failure modes that don't seem to be properly addressed.

Honestly, I'm a bit shocked they went with 'mountains of parallel power feeds' solution instead of... I don't know, doing 6 gauge stranded, which seems like the obvious choice to me? Parallel power feeds like this are always the source of endless fussing and headaches due to exactly the problems we're seeing. Trying to save a couple cents by using more of the same materials they have on hand I'm guessing?


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